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Select the first letter of the word from the list
above to jump to appropriate section of the glossary.
A
ACQUIRER/ACQUIRING BANK A principal member of Visa and
MasterCard that acquires data relating to transactions from a merchant or
card acceptor for processing.
ADDRESS VERIFICATION SERVICE (AVS) A service to help combat
fraud in mail order/telephone order transactions by using the cardholder
billing address information in the authorization request.
AMERICAN EXPRESS A company that specializes in the issuance of
Travel and Entertainment (T&E) credit cards. American Express services the
cards that they issue. They are their own transaction processor with their
own processing network.
APPROVAL RESPONSE An authorization response when a transaction
is approved.
ARBITRATION The procedure used to determine responsibility for a
chargeback-related dispute between two members. Visa or MasterCard resolves
the dispute between members and decides responsibility for the fines which
may be assessed to the participating members. Arbitration is subject to
fees.
AUTHORIZATION A process where an issuer or authorizing processor
approves an authorization request. An approved authorization places a hold
against the cardholder's credit limit for the dollar amount approved. Most
authorizations have a life cycle of three to five days, then the hold
against the cardholder's credit limit is released. A transaction which
settles will usually match an approved authorization amount and clear it
from the authorization status, thus removing the hold against a cardholder's
credit limit.
The Authorization process is different for each Merchant type. Different
information must be sent depending on whether you are a restaurant, retail
establishment, hotel, or mail order/telephone order (MOTO) Merchant. In the
case of MOTO, since the transaction does not take place face-to-face,
address verification (AVS) is used to guard against fraud.
AUTHORIZATION CODE A code that indicates approval or denial for
an authorization request. The code is returned in the authorization response
message and is usually recorded on the transaction receipt as proof of
authorization.
AVERAGE TICKET The average dollar amount of sales drafts
processed within a given time period. Calculate the average ticket by taking
the total dollar amount of sales drafts processed and dividing it by the
total number of sales drafts processed.
AUTOMATED CLEARING HOUSE (ACH) A group of processing institutions
linked by a computer network to exchange (clear and settle) electronic
payment transactions. They electronically processes payment of funds and
government securities among financial institutions and businesses. A group
of U.S. processing institutions that have networked together to exchange
(clear and settle) electronic debit/credit transactions. All EDC (Electronic
Draft Capture) merchants receive credit for their deposits via ACH and
discount fees are debited from all merchants via ACH.
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B
BANKCARD A financial transaction card issued by a bank or
other financial institution; examples are Visa and MasterCard credit or
debit cards.
BANK CARD ASSOCIATION A group of banks formed either for the
purpose of sponsoring a program, (Visa or MasterCard) or to use common
processing and administrative facilities.
BANK IDENTIFICATION NUMBER (BIN) The digit identification
number assigned to both cardholder and merchant banks.
BASIS POINT Basis points are the increments by which discount
rates are calculated. 1 basis point is equivalent to .01% or .0001.
BIN See Bank Identification Number
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C
CAPTURE Converting the authorization amount into a billable
transaction record within a Batch. Transactions cannot be captured unless
previously authorized, and authorizations cannot be captured until the goods
or services have been shipped or transmitted to the consumer.
CARD ASSOCIATIONS These are organizations such as VISA and
MasterCard that, along with the government, make the rules in regard to
acceptance of credit cards. These rules include fees that are charged for
interchange. American Express and Discover are different cases. They are
both the issuer and acceptors, and Merchants must have a separate agreement
with them. This may change as current litigation is resolved.
CARD ISSUER Any association member financial institution, bank,
credit union, or company that issues, or causes to be issued, plastic cards
to cardholders.
CARD READER Any device that is capable of reading encoding on
plastic cards. See Magnetic Stripe Reader
CARD VERIFICATION CODE (CVC) A unique check value encoded on
the magnetic stripe of a card to validate card information during the
authorization process. The card verification value is calculated from the
data encoded on the magnetic stripe using a secure cryptographic process.
This method is used by MasterCard.
CARD VERIFICATION VALUE (CVV) A unique check value encoded on
the magnetic stripe of a card to validate card information during the
authorization process. The card verification value is calculated from the
data encoded on the magnetic stripe using a secure cryptographic process.
This method is used by Visa.
CARTE BLANCHE This is a T&E credit card that competes mainly with
American Express, JCB, and Diners Club. See T&E
CASH ADVANCE A cash loan obtained by a cardholder through
presentation of their/her credit card at a bank office or automated teller
machine.
CASH DISBURSEMENT A transaction that is posted to a
cardholder's monetary accounts when they receive cash from a teller, an ATM,
or by mail.
CHARGEBACK A credit card transaction that is in dispute either
by the cardholder or cardholders bank. Chargebacks are often compared to
canceled checks.
CHARGEBACK PERIOD The number of calendar days from the
endorsement date of a transaction receipt (or processing date, as
applicable), during which time the issuer may exercise a chargeback right.
CHECK DIGIT VERIFICATION An algorithm that is performed on the
primary account number (PAN) to ensure that numbers were not transposed or
miskeyed. The result is the last position of the account number, or check
digit. It is performed to validate a credit card number. Many card issuers
use the MOD-10 Check Digit routine.
CHECK VERIFICATION A system providing merchants with varying
degrees of insurance against bad check losses by verifying the authenticity
of the check and/or its presenter by using a check processing organization.
CODE 10 A call which allows the merchant to inform the
authorization center of a possible fraudulent transaction without alerting
the cardholder (or other person presenting the credit card).
COMMERCIAL CARDS This is the formal name for the following
three types of plastic cards: Corporate Card, Purchase Card, and Business
Card.
A Corporate card is usually issued to the employees of a corporation,
where the corporation assumes all liability for the card's usage. This is
usually issued to larger corporations.
The Purchase card is issued to corporations. It allows the
corporation numerous parameters to control daily and monthly spending
limits, total credit limits, and where the card may be used. Many employees
may be issued the same card number.
The Business card is similar to the Corporate card, but issued to a
business with a few employees and where each employee is responsible for
their purchases.
COMPLIANCE A process where Visa or MasterCard resolves disputes
between members arising from violations of the International Operating
Regulations.
CREDIT/RETURN Return of goods or services initiated by the
cardholder. Merchant refunds ("credits") the cardholder's DDA account via
the terminal.
CREDIT LIMIT This is a dollar amount assigned to a cardholder as the
limit of credit that they are approved to borrow. Credit card purchases are
actually loans to the cardholder by the issuer.
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D
DATA CAPTURE Also known as electronic draft capture (EDC) or draft
capture. A data processing term for collecting, formatting, and storing data
in computer memory according to predefined fields, for example, customer
name, account number, and dollar amount of purchase.
DBA Doing Business As - the trading name of a merchant which
appears on business signs, customer literature, etc.
DEBIT A charge to a customer's bankcard account. A transaction,
such as a check, automated teller machine (ATM) withdrawal, or point-of-sale
(POS) debit purchase that debits a demand deposit account.
DEDICATED LINE A communications circuit between two endpoints
that is permanently connected and always available. Also called a leased
line or private line.
DEMAND DEPOSIT ACCOUNT A commercial checking account
which is used as the depository account for a merchant's credit card
deposit.
DEPOSIT Process of transmitting a batch of transactions
from the merchant to the acquiring institution in preparation for
settlement.
DISCOUNT Fee paid by the merchant to the merchant bank for
processing the merchant's credit card sales (transactions).
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E
ELECTRONIC BENEFITS TRANSFER Through EBT, USDA Food
Stamps and certain government benefits will be converted from paper checks
and coupons to secure debit cards.
ELECTRONIC COMMERCE Sale of goods or services over the Internet.
ELECTRONIC CREDIT APPLICATION A credit application that is
transmitted electronically to a credit evaluation company for approval
recommendations.
ELECTRONIC DRAFT CAPTURE (EDC) A method of processing bankcard
transactions electronically via a Point of Sale (POS) terminal or other
compatible equipment. The transaction information (cardholder account
number, transaction amount, transaction date, authorization number) is
captured electronically and housed in the POS terminal until the terminal is
settled.
ELECTRONIC FUNDS TRANSFER (EFT) Process of electronically
transferring funds to or from an account. This evolved to eliminate the
costly and time consuming paper method.
ENCRYPTION The technique of modifying a known bit stream on a
transmission line so that it appears to be a random sequence of bits to an
unauthorized observer. It often is done automatically in the terminal or
computer before data is transmitted.
EXPIRED CARD A card on which the embossed, encoded, or printed
expiration date has passed.
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F
FRAUDULENT USER An individual who is not the cardholder or designee
and who uses a card (or, in a mail/phone order or recurring transaction, an
account number) to obtain goods or services without the cardholder's
consent.
FRAUDULENT TRANSACTION A transaction unauthorized by the cardholder
of a bankcard. Such transactions are categorized as lost, stolen, not
received, issued on a fraudulent application, counterfeit, fraudulent
processing of transactions, account takeover, or other fraudulent conditions
as defined by the card company or the member company.
FULFILLMENT The satisfaction of a retrieval request. The acquirer
supplies the issuer with the original slip, a legible reproduction thereof,
or a substitute draft if applicable. The fulfillment record confirms the
completion of that action and effects reimbursement to the acquirer. See
Retrieval Request.
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G
GUEST FOLIO A lodging merchant's guest record that contains the
cardholder's transaction information, including check-in and departure
dates, rate, anticipated length of stay at check-in time, applicable
charges, and taxes. The check-in date and the dated amount and authorization
approval code of each authorization must be included on the folio if not on
the sales draft.
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H
HOLOGRAM A laser-created photograph that produces a three dimensional
image used to make counterfeiting plastic cards more difficult.
HOST CAPTURE Method where transaction data is stored in batches on
the host computer at the third-party transaction processor.
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I
IMPRINTER A device used to imprint the embossed lines of a
plastic card on a paper transaction sales draft.
INCREMENTAL AUTHORIZATION This is a request for an additional
dollar amount on a prior authorization. It is used when a transaction is for
a greater dollar amount than the original authorization was for.
INDEPENDENT SALES ORGANIZATION (ISO) A non-member company
contracted by members of VISA or MasterCard to provide merchant or
cardholder servicing.
INTERCHANGE The exchange of information, transaction data and
money among banks. Interchange systems are managed by Visa and MasterCard
associations and are very standardized so banks and merchants worldwide can
use them.
INTERCHANGE FEE The amount paid by the merchant bank (acquirer) to
the cardholder institution (issuer) on each sales transaction. Interchange
rates vary according to the type of merchant (retail, travel and
entertainment, mail order) and the method of processing.
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J
JCB CARD Card issued by JCB (Japan Credit Bureau) International
Credit Card Company, Ltd.
JULIAN DATE Day of the year expressed as a three-position number,
with a range of 001 through 366 (for example, 001 on 1 January).
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K
(empty)
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L
(empty)
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M
MAGNETIC STRIPE A stripe of magnetic information affixed to the back
of a plastic credit or debit card. It contains customer and account
information required to complete electronic financial transactions.
MAGNETIC-STRIPE READER A device that reads information from the
magnetic stripe and transmits that information to a transaction processor or
computer terminal. Also referred to as card reader..
MAGNETIC SWIPES There are two types of terminal readers for
magnetic swipe transactions: Track 1 or Track 2 readers. Terminals with a
Track 1 reader will scan the magnetic bar code and obtain the cardholder's
name, account number, expiration date and proprietary data. Track 2 terminal
readers scan the magnetic bar code for the cardholder's account number and
card expiration date and proprietary data .
MAIL/PHONE ORDER MERCHANT (MOTO) A merchant that transacts business
by mail or phone.
MASTERCARD MasterCard International Inc., and all of its
subsidiaries and affiliates.
MASTERCARD ACQUIRER A member that signs a MasterCard merchant
or disburses currency to a MasterCard cardholder in a cash disbursement, and
directly or indirectly enters the resulting transaction receipt into
interchange.
MASTERCARD ISSUER A member that issues MasterCard cards.
MEMBER An entity that is a member of Visa or MasterCard and refers to
acquirer, associate, ATM acquirer, charter member, disbursing member,
electron acquirer, electron issuer, group member, issuer, merchant bank,
participant, principal, Visa or MasterCard acquirer, and Visa or MasterCard
issuer.
MERCHANT Any business that accepts as payment VISA and/or MasterCard
bankcards.
MERCHANT AGREEMENT A written agreement between a merchant and a
bank containing their respective rights, duties, and warranties with respect
to acceptance of the bankcard and matters related to the bankcard activity.
MERCHANT CATEGORY CODE Four-digit classification code
assigned to the merchant to identify the merchant's principal profession and
type of processing, authorization, and settlement.
MERCHANT NUMBER A series or group of digits that uniquely identifies
the merchant for account and billing purposes.
MERCHANT SERVICES PROVIDER An organization that quotes a
discount rate to the merchant and handles the setup with the processors. An
MSP can be a merchant bank or an independent sales organization for a
merchant bank, called an ISO.
MERCHANT STATEMENT A summary of merchant transactions which is
produced and sent to a merchant on a monthly basis.
MERIT I, III MasterCard's latest series of regulations that are
similar to CPS requirements by Visa. Requires 100% issuer-controlled
authorizations and minimal transaction clearance periods.
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N
(empty)
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O
OFFLINE This refers to requesting an authorization
non-electronically.
OFFLINE DEBIT This refers to a debit transaction that gets treated
the same as a credit card transaction. It will not debit the cardholder's
account immediately, but will be processed through a normal credit card
venue settlement.
ONLINE A method of requesting an authorization through a
communications network other than voice, to an issuer, an authorizing
processor, or stand-in processing.
OVERLIMIT This refers to a cardholder's account that has surpassed
its credit limit with a transaction. (Their outstanding balance is beyond
their credit limit.)
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P
PIN PAD A numeric key pad, which is connected to a terminal or
POS, used by the cardholder to enter the PIN and/or other information.
POINT OF SALE (POS) Location in a merchant establishment at which
sale is consummated by payment for goods or services received. Can also
refer to the direct debit of a purchase amount to a customer's checking
account.
POS SYSTEM Point-of-sale system that processes sale and other
transactions, such as an electronic cash register with specialized software.
PRIOR AUTHORIZATION An authorization usually done before a
transaction takes place. The approved authorization request may be held for
an extended length of time before a card is present or not.
PROCESSING DATE The date on which the transaction is processed by the
acquiring bank.
PROCESSOR A company (often a third party) that handles credit
card transactions for Merchant Banks.
PURCHASING CARD A bankcard designed for smaller business
purchases made by corporations.
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Q
(empty)
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R
RECEIPT A hard copy document recording a transaction that took place
at the point of sale, with a description that usually includes: date,
merchant name/location, primary account number, amount, and reference
number.
REPRESENTMENT The second stage in the chargeback process. This
step includes the acquirer's response to an issuer chargeback by returning
the disputed transaction to the issuer.
RETRIEVAL REQUEST An issuer's request for a copy of an original
sales draft. This issuer uses this request to resolve a disputed transaction
or fulfill a cardholder inquiry.
REVERSAL An online financial transaction used to negate or cancel a
transaction that has been sent through interchange in error.
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S
SALES DRAFT The paper form used by the merchant and signed by
the cardholder to document the transaction.
SETTLEMENT The process by which acquirers and issuers exchange
financial information and value relative to credit card sales. As the sales
transaction value moves from the merchant to the acquiring bank, and then to
the issuer, each party buys and sells the sales ticket. Settlement is what
occurs when the acquiring bank and the issuer exchange data or funds during
that function.
Settlement also means the process by which a merchant closes/balances out
their terminal in order to transmit their credit card transactions.
SMART CARD A credit or debit card embodying a computer chip
with memory and interactive capabilities used for identification and to
store additional data about the cardholder, cardholder account, or both.
Also called an integrated circuit card or a chip card.
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T
T&E MERCHANT An airline, car rental company, or hotel
whose primary function is to provide travel-related services. A travel
agency can be a T&E merchant to the extent that it acts as the agent of an
airline, car rental company, or hotel.
TCP/IP Transport Control Protocol/Internet Protocol. A standard
format for transmitting data from one computer to another. TCP deals with
the construction of the data. IP routes the data from one computer to
another.
TERMINAL A small box-like device that is placed at the merchant
location to electronically process credit cad transactions. Attached to a
telephone line at the merchant location, the terminal is capable of
authorizing, capturing and settling credit card transactions.
TERMINAL CAPTURE Method where transaction data is stored in the
POS terminal until the batch is settled.
THIRD PARTY PROCESSOR An organization that is not an
association member contracted by issuers and acquirers to provide
authorizations, processing, merchant services, and cardholder services.
TRACK 1 Bank discretionary data encoded on a magnetic
stripe. Includes credit card account number, card holder name, and
expiration date.
TRACK 2 Bank discretionary data encoded on a magnetic
stripe. Track 2 includes credit card account number and expiration date.
TRANSACTION Action between a cardholder and a merchant or a
cardholder and a member that results in activity on the cardholder account,
for example, a purchase, cash advance, debit or credit adjustment.
TRANSACTION DATE The date on which a transaction between a cardholder
and a merchant, an acquirer, or a carrier, occurs.
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U
(empty)
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V
VOICE AUTHORIZATION Authorization of a credit card sale obtained by
telephoning a "live" operator.
VISA Visa International Service Association and all of its
subsidiaries and affiliates.
VISANET The systems and services, including the V.I.P. system and
BASE II, through which Visa delivers online financial processing,
authorization, clearing, and settlement services to members.
VOID Nullifies a transaction that has been recorded for settlement,
but not yet settled. This removes the transaction from the batch of
transactions to be settled.
VOICE AUTHORIZATION An approval response obtained through interactive
communication between an issuer and an acquirer, their authorizing
processors, or stand-in processing, through telephone, facsimile, or telex
communications.
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W
X Y
Z
ZERO-FLOOR LIMIT A floor limit with a currency amount of zero
(meaning authorization is required for all transactions).
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